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Out of interest, why do you require charities to have no religious affiliation at all? Perhaps there's some US tax or legal aspect to it?

At at first glance from overseas, it seems oddly churlish and monoculturalist (dare I say "fearful of the prayerful") to disallow community groups and charities where actually yes their beliefs did prompt them to step out in service, and they are not ashamed of that.

I can't imagine it's a big part of your revenue base, and I wonder if there's more people like me who casually read it and quietly think "ooh, that's a bit inward-looking and snarky -- and goodness they put it on the page twice to make sure" than groups who are actually affected by it.

Suddenly those cheery octocats under "We love people who are changing the world" seem just that bit more limited and exclusionary. If I was in a satirical and provocative mood, I might ask, are they holding hands in togetherness, or to keep the undesirables out?




Excluding religious groups from special nonprofit deals is pretty normal in the US. For example, my employer does donation matching for non-religious nonprofits. You're reading a lot more into it than you probably should.


I never noticed that before.. I like the "nonpolitical" one as well, pretty vague in my opinion.




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